Illegal immigrants are considered by some to be an economic on the country because they useservices while paying almost no taxes.drain
(A)response
(B)indicator
(C)reform
(D)
Most immigrants readily form or join existing cultural, recreational, social or "homeland" associations,where mutual aid and cooperative efforts .
(A)confiscate
(B)discriminate
(C)eradicate
(D)germinate
For countries where dual citizenships are not permitted, the of original nationality should berequired.renun
(A)ciationrecalibration
(B)retribution
(C)restoration
(D)
In many countries, the immigration law puts a ban on employing aliens unless they arelawfully for permanent residence or authorized to be employed.admitted
(A)applied
(B)
(C)accustomed
(D)attributed
Tourism operators targeting senior tourists usually provide activities that are not too physically .adapting
(A)demanding
(B)adjusting
(C)yielding
(D)
A passenger would be deemed a/an when he/she is interdicted by an immigration officer forattempting to use a stolen passport to board a plane.
(A)agent
(B)courier
(C)broker
(D)impostor
People who skip or skimp on breakfast are more likely to have signs of plaque in their arteries thanthose who eat breakfast.
(A)submissive
(B)subordinate
(C)subsidiary
(D)substantial
Gender stereotypes are set in children as early as age 6, so it's crucial to introduce anage- curriculum with regard to gender equality.proof
(A)appropriate
(B)eligible
(C)resistant
(D)
Love, positivity, health, and family are all ingredients found in the to happiness.receipt
(A)reception
(B)reaction
(C)recipe
(D)
Full-time foreign students are not to receive a work permit. That is, they are not allowed towork temporarily in this country.eligible
(A)overloaded
(B)overruled
(C)exclusive
(D)請依下文回答第11 題至第15 題:Roger White (2016) assumes that religion is a potential marker of cultural similarity betweensocieties. Two societies that share a common religion or that 11 the same dominant religion are likelymore culturally similar than are two societies that stick to different religious beliefs. Similar to language, whichacts as a representation of culture and a means 12 culture can be transmitted, to the extent that religiousviews 13 or influence broader attitudes, norms, expectations, and mores, it can be viewed as a 14 thatallows culture to be communicated across people and time periods. 15 , the researcher employs two measuresoff religious distance between parent and host countries as a potential proxy variable for culturaldifferences. The results obtained from his study support his assumptions.
ad
(A)here toagonize
(B)deter from
(C)disregard
(D)
by which
(A)even though
(B)so as
(C)in case
(D)
align with
(A)conflict with
(B)deviate from
(C)separate from
(D)
(A)block
(B)pedal
(C)terminal
(D)vessel
Accordingly
(A)Contrarily
(B)Surprisingly
(C)Unexpectedly
(D)請依下文回答第16 題至第20 題:In April 1968, Britain was debating the Race Relations Act, which made it illegal to deny a personemployment, housing or public services based on race or national origin. The law was intended to protectimmigrants from Commonwealth nations, especially former colonies in the Caribbean, India, and Pakistan.The first of these immigrants, 492 Jamaicans, had arrived 20 years earlier. Hundreds of thousands followed."The immigrants were called over," says Sathnam Sanghera, an author whose Sikh parents emigrated fromIndia during that time. "There was a labor shortage. There weren't enough people to run the factories after thewar." The immigrants were granted British citizenship and helped rebuild Britain after World War II. But theyfaced racism. Landlords wouldn't rent to them. Some employers turned them away. The Race Relations Actwas intended to protect immigrants.The tension was especially obvious in Wolverhampton, one of the first cities in Britain to experience massimmigration. Enoch Powell, who represented Wolverhampton in Parliament, feared a race war comingbecause of mass immigration. On April 20, 1968, he took the stage at a Conservative Party event at theMidlands Hotel in Birmingham and gave an incendiary speech that would come to define him — and dividehis country. In the speech, Powell warned, "that tragic and intractable phenomenon which we watch withhorror on the other side of the Atlantic ... is coming upon us here by our own volition and our own neglect."He attacked the bill that outlawed discrimination. He said it was whites who were facing deprivation and thatBritain "must be mad, literally mad, as a nation to be permitting" large numbers of immigrants to enter. TheTimes of London immediately labeled it an "evil speech." Conservative Party leader Edward Heath dismissedPowell from the party leadership. But polls showed a majority of Britons supported Powell. Many protested,saying, "Powell was right." The speech emboldened racists.16 What is this passage mainly about?Race Relations Act.
(A)Wolverhampton's
(B)mass immigration.Britain's making immigration laws.
(C)Anti
(D)-immigration in Britain.17Which of the following best describes the intention of drafting the Race Relations Act?To boost
(A)population growth of the country.To
(B)welcome commonwealth nationals to become labors in Britain.To safeguard immigrants from being treated based on race.
(C)To trigger race war in Wolverhampton.
(D)18What is the main idea of the second paragraph?Sathnam Sanghera's parents emigrated
(A)from India.Factories did not have enough people
(B)after World War II.Immigrants helped rebuild Britain but faced racism.
(C)Details of the
(D)Race Relations Act are explained.19According to the third paragraph, why did Powell attack the bill?Immigrants were being mistreated.
(A)People neglected immigration
(B)laws.Britain must permit large numbers of immigrants to enter.
(C)White people were being discriminated.
(D)20Which of the following is true about Enoch Powell and his speech?Powell's speech
(A)initiated Britain's immigration laws.Powell's speech
(B)terminated the Race Relations Act.Powell's political party did not support his racist view.
(C)Powell
(D)was right about the prospect of improved race relations.